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Archive for March, 2014

Jacki Ginnings, seen here last season, won her first varsity singles match Monday. (John Fisken photo)

Jacki Ginnings, seen here last season, won her first varsity singles match Monday. (John Fisken photo)

Ginnings, sporting her Player of the Match reward.

Ginnings, sporting her Player of the Match reward. (Ken Stange photo)

Not even the combined forces of two schools can topple the Wolves.

Coupeville High School ran into its future Olympic League rivals, Port Townsend and Chimacum, Monday in its girls’ tennis opener and overcame the wind and the unholy union of Redskins and Cowboys, pulling out a 4-3 win.

With two wins in both singles and doubles, the Wolves avenged a loss from last season and had multiple highlights.

Freshman Valen Trujillo won her first time out, teaming with Ana Luvera for a key doubles win, while a former doubles player who has converted to singles won the first Player of the Match honor (it comes with a stylish necklace) from CHS coach Ken Stange.

Soccer star Jacki Ginnings played in several varsity doubles matches as a sophomore, teaming with Micky LeVine, but Monday she stepped on the court alone for the first time.

Having earned the squad’s #2 singles position in a preseason tourney, she more than held her own against a player not from her own team.

Jacki played with both aggression and finesse,” Stange said. “She gutted out a tough second set to earn her first-ever singles victory. Hooray for her!

“She opened big, playing consistent tennis as she cruised in the first set,” he added. “She was mentally tough, scrapped and hustled.”

Complete results:

Varsity:

#1 Singles — Allie Hanigan beat Frances Sheldon-O’Neal 6-3, 6-1

“Allie was at her best today when she was keeping the ball low to the ground, making her opponent unable to tee off on a big shot. It was excellent counter-punch tennis.”

#2 Singles — Jacki Ginnings beat An Nguyen 6-1, 7-6 (9-7)

#3 Singles — Micky LeVine lost to Olivia Baird 6-1, 6-2

Micky found out she’d be playing singles about four days ago. She’s very athletic, and handled herself well against a player who was basically a wall. The girl just didn’t miss.”

#1 Doubles — Samantha Martin/Sydney Aparicio lost to Rachel Maki/Sara Allen 6-2, 6-4

“This was Sydney’s first-ever high school tennis match, and she, as well as Sam, played well. They may face some struggles early, but they both have skills and they both have high ceilings. I think they will find their groove.”

#2 Doubles — McKenzie Bailey/Wynter Thorne lost to Vy Nguyen/Casi Rowland 3-6, 6-2, 10-5

“This one was a heart breaker. They learned a couple of valuable lessons that will serve them well. They are going to be a fierce #2 team.”

#3 Doubles —  Ana Luvera/Valen Trujillo beat Amy Plastow/Rachel Smith 6-2, 6-1

“They were too much for their opponents. No matter who they play at #3, they’ll be tough to beat.”

#4 Doubles — Maureen Rice/Haleigh Deasy beat Neena Milton/Makenzi Richie 6-0, 6-1

Maureen and Haleigh took it to a couple of rookies.”

JV:

#5 Doubles — Jazmine Franklin/Aura Corredor beat Jordyn Johnson/Tessa Rasmussen 8-3

“It was the first ever match for our girls, and they won against another pair of rookies. What a great way to start the year for Jazmine and Aura!”

#6 Doubles — Ivy Luvera/Maureen Rice led 3-0 when the call of the ferry ended the match.

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Josh Bayne, seen here last season, got Coupeville's first RBI of the new season Monday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  Josh Bayne, seen here doing a home run trot last season, got Coupeville’s first RBI of the new season Monday. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Timing. It’s all about timing.

Breaking out of an early-game funk, the Coupeville High School baseball squad exploded for five runs in the fifth inning Monday, propelling themselves to a huge come-from-behind 8-4 win over arch-rival South Whidbey.

The Opening Day victory was sweet for multiple reasons.

One, it came on the road. Two, it showed the Wolves are resilient. Three, it was the kind of game where nearly everyone on the field chipped in with a key play.

Oh yes, and did I mention they beat their closest rivals and the only other 1A school playing baseball in the Cascade Conference? Cause that’s kind of a big deal, every day and in every way.

The two schools will get back at it twice more this week with games in Coupeville Wednesday and back in Langley on Friday. Coupeville will also host South Whidbey Thursday in the lone meeting between the program’s JV teams.

The first win didn’t come easily, however. The Falcon hurler kept the Wolves off-balance by mixing up speeds, while his support crew tagged CHS starter Ben Etzell for three runs in the third.

Etzell was in lock-down mode after that, scattering a couple of meaningless singles and eventually throwing a complete game.

Coupeville finally found its groove at the plate in the top of the fifth, with a walk from Korbin Korzan and a single from Cole Payne setting the table.

Josh Bayne immediately took advantage, lashing an RBI single to right center, then the South Whidbey defense helped the Wolf cause with a couple of key errors.

Unable to field choppers off the bats of Jake Tumblin and Morgan Payne, the Falcons threw the ball away twice, letting in three unearned runs.

Etzell and Aaron Curtin rapped RBI singles in the seventh to top off the Wolf scoring.

While he was happy to get back on the bus with a win, CHS coach Willie Smith can see areas his squad needs to work on as it goes forward.

“This was a good game for us,” Smith said. “Not only for the win over South Whidbey, but because we were able to come back to win it on their home field and with us not really hitting on all cylinders offensively.

“We will definitely need to do a better job of adjusting at the plate,” he added. “But we did a great job of taking advantage of some miscues and capitalized on our speed and some timely hits.”

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Wolf senior Breeanna Messner dreams of sunny, dry days. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Wolf senior Breeanna Messner dreams of sunny, dry days. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

One game into spring and we already have a winner for oddest reason for a postponed game.

It wasn’t the persistent wind that kept the Coupeville High School softball squad from boarding a ferry and venturing over to Port Townsend for a non-league season opener Monday.

It was rain. But not rain from today so much, as rain from the last couple of days.

CHS coaches David and Amy King were on their way to meet their team at the school when the word came down.

And that word, according to the Port Townsend Leader’s Facebook page, is that the infield in Port Townsend was UNDERWATER.

Not wet. Not damp. Not muddy. Completely underwater. Like “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea”-style.

So now the Wolves will open their season on the road at ATM Wednesday. Their home opener against South Whidbey, originally scheduled for Tuesday, was just bumped to Thursday to fix a scheduling snafu for Friday Harbor.

Yes, there will be a test on that later.

The home opener, could, of course, be preempted if Noah and his ark were to make a surprise appearance out on the prairie in the next 48 hours, signalling another infield sinking beneath the sea.

The Port Townsend game should be rescheduled at some point during the season.

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Erin

Erin Rosenkranz heads up field in pursuit of the ball. (John Fisken photos)

Coupeville's Fab Five

The Islanders bring together players from North, South and Central Whidbey. Coupeville’s own Fab Five — (l to r) Jacki Ginnings, Tori Wellman, Rosenkranz, Jenn Spark, Micky LeVine.

Micky LeVine (John Fisken photos)

LeVine battles for the ball under pressure.

Hefflefinger scores, Islanders win.

The song is stuck on repeat, but no one seems to be complaining, as it’s catchy, has a good beat and is being played by a team that has swept into sole possession of first place.

The latest victim of the supremely hot Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad was the Northshore Evolution, who fell 2-1 Sunday afternoon at Ft. Nugent.

It was the seventh straight win for an Islander team that now finds itself sitting at 8-2, alone in first place with two games left to play in the season.

And the win played out in familiar fashion, as Jacalyn Hefflefinger and Jenn Spark set the table, while Kenzie Perry slammed the door shut.

Hefflefinger shook things up early, banging home a ball in the fifth minute of the game for her seventh goal in as many games.

She and teammate Bailee Olson were fighting for the ball in the Northshore box, and, with the help of a puddle that stopped the ball and set her up nicely, it was golden leg time once again for the goal-scoring phenom from Oak Harbor.

Keeping the pressure on, Whidbey got a second score ten minutes later.

Spark lofted a patented near-perfect corner kick, laying it right at the feet of Selena Medina, who, without an ounce of mercy in her body, calmly lashed it past a helpless Evolution goalie.

After that, it was all about defense, and the Islanders were near-stifling. With Perry in net, and her band of scrappy defenders guarding her turf, Northshore had few opportunities to score.

The Evolution finally did, on a goal that benefited from the refs going blind — twice.

First they awarded Northshore a questionable free kick, then they allowed a goal to stand after an Evolution player kicked the ball free from Perry’s hands — a no-no.

“In my mind, that’s a 2-0 win,” Islander coach Sean LeVine said. “Second half was all us. Our defense was stout and they never got behind us in the entire second half.”

Whidbey kept the pressure on, with multiple players ripping shots on goal. Olson, Micky LeVine, Erin Rosenkranz, Becca Pabona, Kendra Warwick, Hailey Erbe, Morgan Zylstra and Paige Waterman all rattled the Evolution netminder.

LeVine, after some thought, tabbed Warwick as his player of the game.

Kendra really held down the midfield today, battling much larger opponents and winning, controlling possession, and helped to relieve the defense from having to pressure the ball in the middle,” LeVine said. “Kendra is our own Ozzie Alonso! Great job today!”

The Islanders host their next game, Sunday, Mar. 23 (2 PM) at Ft. Nugent, then hit the road for their season finale.

For more photos, including pics of Islander players who call Oak Harbor and South Whidbey home, head over to:

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf350b8730ec

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Jared Dickson (right) goes high as he fights for a ball. (John Fisken photos)

Jared Dickson (right) goes high as he fights for a ball. (John Fisken photos)

Devoted soccer moms Janine Bundy (left) and Cheridan Eck hunker down on a balmy Whidbey afternoon.

   Devoted soccer moms Janine Bundy (left) and Cheridan Eck hunker down on a balmy Whidbey afternoon.

Aaron Wright rampages.

Aaron Wright (7) rampages.

The Wolf varsity.

The Wolf varsity and new head coach Kyle Nelson (back row, far right).

Loren Nelson directs traffic.

Loren Nelson directs traffic.

Coupeville's JV, coached by the dapper Gary Manker.

Coupeville’s JV, coached by the dapper Gary Manker.

Wolf goalie Joel Walstad clears the ball.

Wolf goalie Joel Walstad clears the ball.

Spring has sprung.

The third, and final, sports season of the 2013-2014 school year went live Saturday, as the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad kicked off with a home jamboree against South Whidbey and Lake Stevens.

On hand to document the doings was traveling photo man John Fisken.

If you like what you see, follow the link below to see more (and possibly purchase some). A percentage of all sales helps fund college scholarships for CHS student athletes.

And don’t forget — use the coupon code EB57554962 (buy before Mar. 30) and you’ll get 15% off your purchase.

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=5755&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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